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The parents of the Michigan teen who allegedly shot up his school earlier this week were found hiding in a Detroit warehouse early Saturday after leading authorities on a widespread manhunt, police said.

Jennifer and James Crumbley were arrested and booked into the Oakland County Jail after officers acting on a tip found them in a room inside the commercial building, Detroit Police Chief James White said.

“They appear to be hiding inside the building,” the chief told reporters.

The fugitives seemed “very distressed” when they were captured, White said, adding that one of the two had their head down and a hoodie on and appeared “just very upset.”

A tipster reported seeing the couple’s SUV in the building’s parking lot, some 50 miles from their Oxford home, and not far from the border with Canada. The person also had video of one of the fugitives entering the warehouse, White said.

t appears that someone helped the couple get into the building, and that person could now be facing charges, the top cop said.

“They didn’t break in. Somebody let them in,” White said.

Local cops and federal authorities said early Friday afternoon they were hunting for the couple, who were supposed to turn themselves in after Oakland County prosecutors charged them each with involuntary manslaughter in connection with their son Ethan Crumbley’s deadly attack.

Their attorneys maintained that the pair had left town for their safety and were not trying to elude law enforcement.


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Michigan high school shooter Ethan Crumbley’s parents — who were both hit with involuntary manslaughter charges Friday in connection with the crime — have faced legal trouble before, including for driving under the influence in Florida, according to court records.

According to online records in Duval County, Florida, James and Jennifer Crumbley were charged with DUI on Feb. 12, 2005, pleaded no contest and were fined $652 each.

James was also busted by the Atlantic Beach Police Department for driving with a suspended license and having an improper tag. He paid a fine of more than $200.

A few years earlier in 2003, Jennifer was accused of writing a worthless check for $150, but the misdemeanor case was later dismissed. She committed the same offense in 2004 and was fined $240, according to the records.

Meanwhile, James also got embroiled in legal trouble over child-support payments to his ex-wife, with whom he shares 18-year-old son Eli, Ethan’s half-brother, the Daily Beast reported.


The father’s last employer was San Francisco-based Monarch, which provides GPS tracking to the transportation industry, a company spokesman told the Daily Beast.


James “briefly worked … as an independent contractor from February to July 2021” and “was terminated for reasons unrelated” to his son’s case, the rep told the outlet.
 
The parents charged in connection with this week's deadly shooting at Oxford High School in Michigan each pleaded not guilty to four counts of involuntary manslaughter Saturday in their first hearing since being taken into custody in the middle of the night while hiding in Detroit.

The couple was captured early Saturday following an hourslong search after they did not turn themselves in for their scheduled arraignment Friday afternoon, according to law enforcement officials.

The attorney for James and Jennifer Crumbley, who could be seen fighting back tears during the arraignment, had said Friday they were returning to town for their court date after detectives announced they were trying to locate the couple. But the duo remained missing late Friday and the U.S. Marshals Service joined in on the search.

At Saturday's arraignment, the judge ordered they each be held on $500,000 with no 10% bond and will submit to drug testing and be fitted with a GPS monitor if they are able to meet bond. They were also asked to surrender any weapons to the sheriff's office.

Shannon Smith, who is representing Jennifer Crumbley, repeatedly said her clients were not fleeing prosecution and planned to turn themselves in Saturday morning, a categorization that Oakland County prosecutor Karen McDonald disputed.

"While it’s human nature to want to find someone to blame or something to point to or something that gives us answers, the charges in this case are intended to make an example and send a message," Smith and James Crumbley's lawyer, Mariell Lehman, said in a statement Saturday. "The prosecution has very much cherry-picked and slanted specific facts to further their narrative to do that."

McDonald recommended the $500,000 bond, saying, "These are not people that we can be assured will return to court on their own."

The parents were each charged Friday with four counts of involuntary manslaughter. Their son, 15-year-old Ethan Crumbley, allegedly used his father's semi-automatic handgun in the Tuesday shooting that killed four and injured seven.

"They could have stopped it and they had every reason to know he was dangerous," McDonald said during the hearing Saturday.

Jennifer and James Crumbley are due back in court in Dec. 14.
 
The accused Michigan high school shooter told officials that violent drawings he made ahead of his deadly rampage were for a “video game,” a letter released Saturday said.

Just one day before the Tuesday mass shooting, an Oxford High School counselor and another staff member had talked to Ethan Crumbley, 15, after he was spotted shopping for bullets on his phone, according to the letter, published by WXYZ.

The morning of the shooting that left four dead and seven injured they talked to his parents about drawings Ethan was making in class about murder and suicide, superintendent Tim Thorne reportedly wrote.

“The student was immediately removed from the classroom and brought to the guidance counselor’s office where he claimed the drawing was part of a video game he was designing and informed counselors that he planned to pursue video game design as a career,” Thorne told parents, according to the article.
“At no time did counselors believe the student might harm others based on his behavior, responses and demeanor, which appeared calm.

Dear Wildcat Nation,

We would like to express our continued grief and anguish at the tragic events of the past week. The shooting at Oxford High School has tested the resolve of our students, families and staff like never before

Our Wildcat community has been shaken to its core, and our hearts are with the families impacted by this unthinkable tragedy and those still recovering from their injuries. Please keep the victims and families in your thoughts and prayers.

When this unthinkable tragedy unfolded on the afternoon of Nov. 30, our staff and students acted swiftly and heroically, which undoubtedly prevented additional deaths and additional injuries by implementing our District’s detailed emergency protocols and procedures. We cannot thank our students and staff enough for their quick and decisive actions and their bravery. We are also immensely thankful for the first responders, who responded quickly and literally ran into harm’s way to prevent even more lives from being lost,

As many of you know, the first shots were fired during passing time between classes when hundreds of students were in the hallway transitioning from one classroom to the other. Before the shooter was able to walk a short distance to enter the main hallway, students and staff had already entered classrooms, locked doors, erected makeshift barricades and locked down or fled according to their training. The suspect was not able to gain access to a single classroom.

We have asked an independent security consultant to review all district safety practices and procedures. An initial review including review of videotaped evidence show staff and students’ response to the shooter was efficient, exemplary and definitely prevented further deaths and injuries.

In response to family concerns, we have also begun the process of reviewing attendance records prior to this event as well as collecting and reviewing any and all communications that the district may have received. At this time, we agree with the Oakland County Sheriff’s Office assessment that previous incidents, including thoe addressed in the Nov. 12 communication to families, are unrelated to the events of Nov. 30.

Following yesterday’s press conference by the Oakland County Prosecutor, many of our parents have understandably been asking for the school’s version of events leading up to the shooting. It’s critically important to the victims, our staff and our entire community that a full and transparent accounting be made. To that end, I’ve asked for a third-party investigation be conducted so we leave no stone unturned, including any and all interaction the student had with staff and students. Because that may take time,we wanted to provide some additional specific information about the events that transpired.

On Nov. 29, the suspect was discovered by a teacher to be viewing images of bullets on his cell phone during class. The suspect met with a counselor and another staff member and indicated he and his mother recently went to the shooting range and that shooting sports are a family hobby. Consistent with our school policies and procedures, the school attempted to make contact with the student’s mother to discuss the incident but did not initially hear back. The next day, his parents confirmed his account.

On the morning of Nov. 30, a teacher observed concerning drawings and written statements that have been detailed in media reports, which the teacher reported to school counselors and the Dean of students. The student was immediately removed from the classroom and brought to the guidance counselor’s office where he claimed the drawing was part of a video game he was designing and informed counselors that he planned to pursue video game design as a career. The student’s parents were also called in. Because it was difficult to reach the parents, the student remained in the office for an hour and a half while counselors continued to observe, analyze and speak with the student. While waiting for his parents to arrive, the student verbalized his concern he would be missing homework assignments and requested his science homework, which he then worked on while in the office. At no time did counselors believe the student might harm others based on his behavior, responses and demeanor, which appeared calm. In addition, despite media reports, whether or not the gun was in his backpack has not been confirmed by law enforcement to our knowledge nor by our investigation at this time.

While both of his parents were present, counselors asked specific probing questions regarding the potential for self-harm or harm to others. His answers, which were affirmed by his parents during the interview, led counselors to again conclude he did not intend on committing either self-harm or harm to others. The student’s parents never advised the school district that he had direct access to a firearm or that they had recently purchased a firearm for him.

Counseling was recommended for him, and his parents were notified that they had 48 hours to seek counseling for their child or the school would contact Child Protective Services.

When the parents were asked to take their son home for the day, they flatly refused and left without their son, apparently to return to work.

Given the fact that the child had no prior disciplinary infractions, the decision was made he would be returned to the classroom rather than sent home to an empty house. These incidents remained at the guidance counselor level and were never elevated to the principal or assistant principal’s office. While we understand this decision has caused anger, confusion and prompted understandable questioning, the counselors made a judgment based on their professional training and clinical experience and did not have all the facts we now know. Our counselors are deeply committed longstanding school members who have dedicated their lives to supporting students and addressing student mental health and behavioral issues.

Again, I have personally asked for a third-party review of all the events of the past week because our community and our families deserve a full, transparent accounting of what occurred. We also plan to make regular updates to our families and community. Trained mental health professionals and grief counselors with experience in coping with school tragedies are available for anyone who needs support at this difficult moment. Information about counseling is available on the district’s website. We have been asked by some parents regarding our plans for continuing our children’s learning and education in the wake of this tragedy. We have already begun to discuss the appropriate path and timeline with trained grief counselors, safety experts, law enforcement, our school employees and our families on the best way to help our community grieve, process, be together, and continue their education.

hank you again for your outpouring of love and support for our Wildcat families during this incredibly difficult time. The unparalleled support from our community and neighboring communities gives me hope that we can and will persevere and emerge stronger. Please continue to pray for the victims and their families, the injured and pray for the strength to carry on in the days ahead;

Oxford StrOng, Tim



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Officials said they told his parents – who are now facing charges of involuntary manslaughter in connection with their alleged role in the rampage — to bring him to a shrink in two days or face CPS.

“When the parents were asked to take their son home for the day, they flatly refused and left without their son, apparently to return to work,” Thorne reportedly wrote in the letter.


“Given the fact that the child had no prior disciplinary infractions, the decision was made he would be returned to the classroom rather than sent home to an empty house.”

Continue reading at link

The mother of this man's older son said he neglected that child and spoiled the shooter. She also said Jennifer treated her son poorly.

 
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Did anyone else watch the live coverage of Columbine? I was working in home care for Miss Rogers. She was 93 and amazing. We sat in front of the TV, shocked and both crying. I became obsessed with this story. For years. I couldn't get over the images of children escaping through school windows and the thought that parents sent their kids in blissful ignorance to school that morning. While I'm not making less of any school shooting, (they are all equally horrific) this is the first one since to evoke the shock and dread of Columbine. For me, at least.

I just can't get over the fact that the parents and school officials sat in the office with this student who was so out of control that other parents didn't let their kids go to school that day, and they didn't even confirm where the weapon was. School staff said he should go home. Bio units wanted their crotch rot at school. The gun was in the bookbag the whole while. During the meeting, the murder weapon was in the room with adults who were trying to avoid a school shooting! And when he starts shooting, Mom texts him not to do this and Dad runs home to look for the gun he wasn't worrying about when he was in the meeting about the danger his son represented, but not one person in the room said, prove where the gun is or take him out of school.

How the hell is it that I once read of a small child who was expelled for making a gun with his fingers and this human reject was allowed to stay in school without anyone confirming where the murder weapon was? They knew it existed, and they were so concerned about his mental state that they called in both parents and gave them 48 hours to get him in counseling, BUT DIDN'T LOCATE THE GUN.

I'm pretty sure at this point, mental disease is the norm in this country.
 
Makes me think of Sandy Hook. In that case, mom had bought all those guns for her son.
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I bet mom is wishing she had swallowed
I bet mom is pissed off by all the fuss, I mean, shit happens, amirite?

@Donut Whisperer, my personal theory is a national case of PTSD that began on 9/11. First foreign attack on our soil since 1812. We had been inviolable for most of our history, unlike cheek by jowl Europe. Disbelief launched conspiracy claims. Some folks found it preferable to believe our government took out the towers, than that a few people a half-step out of the stone age, attacked us with our own infrastructure. That loss of certainty is still reverberating.
 
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A neighbor of accused Michigan high school shooter Ethan Crumbley says she warned authorities about his parents’ alleged neglect of him before last week’s slaughter, a new report reveals.

Kayla LeMieux, who lives near Ethan and his parents, James and Jennifer Crumbley, said she alerted child-abuse authorities that the pair would leave their son — then 8 or 9 years old — home alone while they went out bar-hopping, according to a report in the Detroit Free Press.

“When they were gone, he would come knock on our door,” LeMieux, 28, told the outlet. “They didn’t leave him with a phone.”

LeMieux said she notified Child Protective Services but doesn’t know if they took action — noting that the alleged neglect continued.

“It was really when I finally started to say more, because I was just like, even after calling CPS, they were still doing it and even me saying something to them, they were still like, ‘Oh, he is fine,’ ” she said.

A spokesman for the child-care agency told the Free Press that they could not confirm LeMieux’s claims because all abuse allegations reported to the entity are kept confidential.
 

The school could have sent Crumbly away. They could have searched his bookbag. According to this article, there may be charges filed against school officials, and I agree with that. They didn't allow any parents in that school to make an informed decision about their children's safety. They ignored the information they had, allowed unfit parents to bully them into keeping a child who obviously posed a threat, and they didn't even search for a weapon.

This should have been prevented. Those with authority and responsibility for the students should be held accountable. I'll be surprised if we don't see some suicides from responsible adults. That must be an unbearable burden.
 
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Michigan school shooting suspect Ethan Crumbley texted his mother about “demons” and “ghosts,” just one of several disturbing signs his parents ignored leading up to the tragic slaughter at Oxford High School

The 15-year-old videotaped himself torturing animals, made Molotov cocktails at home, and drew a sketch of himself shooting up his school in his journal, Oakland County Assistant Prosecutor Marc Keast said in court.

Crumbley also once texted a friend “it’s time to shoot up a school JK,” the Detroit Free Press reported.

The boy is accused of killing four students and a teacher, and hurting six others in the Nov. 30 shooting.

The revelations about the teen’s behavior in the months leading up to the attack came as Keast successfully argued that the court should not reduce the $500,000 bond set for parents Jennifer and James Crumbley.

The pair, who have been charged with four counts of involuntary manslaughter, are accused of allowing their son access to the 9mm handgun he alleged used to massacre his classmates, and ignoring key warning signs before the attack.
Keast said the March texts describing a demon or ghosts in the house were sent multiple times, and sometimes it would take Jennifer Crumbley hours to reply, according to Fox 2 Detroit. He also wrote several times about demons in his journal, The Sun reported.
“The evidence shows a 15-year-old who has repeatedly informed his parent that he was hallucinating, the same 15-year-old who continuously demonstrated tendencies that were worrisome – all able to be found by his parents,” Keast said.

Keast also said a friend of Ethan Crumbley moved away in late October. He said this had an impact on the teen that his parents acknowledged but failed to address. Another notebook that was not hidden had photos of guns on every page, he said.

Yet 45-year-old dad James bought the handgun his son is accused of using to slaughter his classmates just four days earlier, on Black Friday, as an early Christmas present for the teen. And the parents did not remove the teen from school when he was found earlier on the day of the shooting drawing violent sketches on his classwork.
District Court Judge Julie Nicholson refused to lower the bond, concluding the parents were a flight risk, saying the charges in the case are too serious.

Crumbley, separately appeared by video from jail for a brief hearing Friday, in which he waived his right to a probable-cause hearing in his case.
 
SOUTHFIELD, Mich. (AP) — A teenager charged with killing four students at a Michigan high school will pursue an insanity defense, his lawyers said in a notice filed Thursday as he, his parents and school officials faced a new lawsuit over the attack at Oxford High School.

The notice, listed in a summary of case filings, should lead to mental health exams of 15-year-old Ethan Crumbley, who is charged as an adult with murder and other crimes for the shooting, which also wounded six other students and a teacher. Experts will consider whether the teen understood the wrongfulness of his conduct on the day of the shooting.

The lawsuit, meanwhile, was announced on behalf of the parents of Tate Myre, who was slain Nov. 30, and other students who witnessed the shootings. It alleges negligence by school officials and Crumbley’s parents over the attack.
[....]
The lawsuit, which seeks at least $25,000, names Oxford High School’s dean of students, two counselors and three teachers as defendants. Crumbley and his parents also are named as defendants.

The lawsuit was filed Thursday in Oakland County Circuit Court on behalf of Tate Myre’s parents, William and Sheri. Also named as plaintiffs are Chad and Meghan Gregory, whose son, Keegan, was hiding in a school bathroom with Justin Shilling when Shilling was fatally shot.

The lawsuit also was filed on behalf of Lauren Aliano, whose daughters, Sophia Kempen and Grace Kempen, were hiding in classrooms during the shooting.

Ethan Crumbley is being held in the Oakland County Jail.
[....]
After the reports are in, it will be up to the judge to decide if an insanity defense can go forward, Raben said.

Under Michigan law, if someone is found not guilty by reason of insanity, they don’t walk free. They must be referred to a state psychiatric center for custody and further evaluation.

Someone who is found guilty but mentally ill still would be sentenced to prison but with recommendations that they get treatment.

The AP left a voicemail Thursday afternoon seeking comment from Ethan Crumbley’s attorney, Paulette Michel Loftin, about the insanity defense notice.

The prosecutor’s office said a request for an evaluation of Ethan Crumbley’s criminal responsibility from his attorney was expected and standard procedure.
[....]

 
Prosecutors have asked a judge to put a stop to 'inappropriate' and 'disrespectful' displays of affection in the courtroom between James and Jennifer Crumbley, the parents of accused Michigan high school shooter Ethan Crumbley.
James, 45, and Jennifer Crumbley, 43, have been blowing kisses and mouthing 'I love you' to each other during hearings - and the prosecution in the case and the families of the school shooting victims, have had enough, according to a court filing obtained by the Detroit Free Press.
'Mr. & Mrs. Crumbley's conduct in court makes a mockery of the crimes they are accused of committing,' Chief Assistant Prosecutor David Williams said in a statement Wednesday. 'The courtroom is not a place for blowing kisses and sending secret signals. This is a time for families to pursue justice.'
'These communications ... not only disparage the integrity of the judicial proceedings as a serious distraction, but are also traumatic for the families of the deceased victims,' Oakland County Assistant Prosecutor Markeisha Washington wrote in the filing. 'Their communication is far more distracting and offensive than a cell phone going off, which the court would not condone.'
The prosecution's request filed on Wednesday for Ethan's parent to end their courtroom antics comes after several of the prosecutors were contacted by family members of the victims, asking why the parents are allowed to communicate in court.
During one hearing in December, James Crumbley 'with his mask partially pulled down, mouthed what appeared to be 'I love you' to his wife, according to the filing.

At that same hearing, when Crumbley left the courtroom, it led to 'additional nonverbal communication' between the couple.

At a January 7 court hearing on Zoom, when a breakout session with the attorneys and the judge was held, the Crumbleys 'remained on screen during this breakout session and ... Jennifer Crumbley signaled and mouthed to (her husband) what appeared to be 'I love you,' waved at him, and continued to signal and mouth words to him.'

Oakland County Prosecutor Karen McDonald wants a judge to prohibit the Crumbleys from any contact, physical, verbal or nonverbal contact, during proceedings.

In the filing, they said the defense 'expressed a willingness' to get the Crumbleys to comply, the Detroit Free Press reported.
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Oh look... they are all lovey dovey in court... yet she was fucking around. Things that make you go Hmmm.
I guess they think this will all go away, because they haven't had to deal with any issues with their kid before.

Honestly glad the state is pursuing the charges, the parents had all kinds of signs their crotch fruit was deranged, and ignored them.
 
Bring in two screens they can’t see each other through. Parents in that courtroom can’t see their kids because these idiots bought a gun for their own out of control kid.

They don’t deserve whatever self serving pleasure they are getting from acting out high school hormonal love in this courtroom. They don’t deserve to clap eyes on each other.
 
A judge on Thursday ordered the parents of a 15-year-old boy charged with killing four students at his Michigan high school to stand trial on involuntary manslaughter charges.

Rochester Hills District Court Judge Julie Nicholson said following the preliminary examination for Jennifer and James Crumbley that she found enough evidence to send their case to circuit court.

They are charged with involuntary manslaughter and accused of making the gun used in the shooting available to the teen. The couple is also accused of failing to intervene when he showed signs of mental distress at home and at school.
[....]
“The court finds that the deaths of the four victims could have been avoided if James and Jennifer Crumbley exercised ordinary care and diligence in the care of their son,” Nicholson said.

Nicholson said prosecutors showed Ethan Crumbley presented a danger to the community and “that danger was apparent to an ordinary mind.” Testimony showed that Ethan Crumbley was a “troubled young man” and his parents knew it, she said.

“But they purchased a gun which he believed was his,” Nicholson added.

The Crumbleys’ attorneys insisted the couple didn’t know their son might plan an attack and didn’t make the gun easy to find in their home, but Oakland County Prosecutor Karen McDonald said Thursday that Ethan Crumbley reached out to his parents for help.

And while no help was forthcoming, the coming trouble was foreseeable, she said.

“You’re allowed to be a terrible parent,” McDonald said. “if that’s all this was, we wouldn’t be here.”
[....]

 
[....]
Last week, Crumbley's attorney asked for him to be removed from the Oakland County Jail and be put back into Children's Village, which is a juvenile facility.

Crumbley was removed in December from Children's Village to Oakland County Jail after a district court judge said he was a threat to children at the facility.

On March 1st, Judge Rowe denied the defense's motion for transfer, and ordered that Crumbley remain in the County Jail.

Yet, the judge did further order the the Oakland County Prosecutor's Office to confer with the jail to determine if there is a place in the jail to house Crumbley that does not have light 24 hours a day and is not within sight or sound of any adult inmates.
[....]

 
ONTIAC, Mich. (AP) - A judge has denied a motion to reduce bonds for the jailed parents of a Michigan teenager charged in a fatal shooting at his high school.

Oakland County Circuit Judge Cheryl Matthews said Tuesday that James and Jennifer Crumbley’s actions before their Dec. 4 arrests in a commercial building in Detroit “were premeditated to conceal their whereabouts” and “not consistent with cooperating with law enforcement.”

The Crumbleys had disappeared the day before after they were charged with involuntary manslaughter.
[....]
Their attorneys asked for a lower bond of $100,000 apiece.

Lawyers say the Crumbleys are not a risk to the public and would wear electronic monitoring devices. Oakland County Judge Cheryl Matthews will hear arguments Tuesday.

The parents are accused of failing to keep a gun secure at home and failing to reasonably care for their son when he showed signs of mental distress.

An Oakland County judge ruled against the Crumbley's previous request for a lower bond in January. The judge noted that the couple did not immediately turn themselves in after charges were issued.

Police arrested the couple at an art warehouse in Detroit more than 12 hours after they were charged.

The unmitigated gall. However, I suppose their attorney has to do whatever he can. Ugh.

 
An Oxford Schools security guard who was allegedly armed and roaming the school during November's shooting failed to stop the shooter, according to an attorney who reviewed surveillance video from the incident.

Ven Johnson, who is representing a number of parents of shooting victims in multiple civil lawsuits against school district officials, said at a news conference Wednesday that surveillance video shows a security officer stationed at Oxford High School, opening the door of a bathroom where Ethan Crumbley was still carrying out the attack, then closing the door and walking away.

Johnson said he believes the guard opened the door in the moments before Crumbley shot student Justin Shilling.
[....]
Johnson said the guard told investigators she walked past Tate Myre, who had already been shot, and believed he was participating in a shooting drill, wearing very realistic makeup to depict injury. Myre died in the shooting.

Craig Shilling, Justin's father, said he also reviewed the video.

"It's difficult to know that he could still be here," he said during the news conference. "There was literally someone 5 feet away from him that could have stopped him."

In a news release, Oxford Schools Superintendent Ken Weaver wrote that students and staff acted "swiftly" and followed training guidelines. Weaver did not address the specific allegations against the security guard.

"Review by a security expert confirmed our staff response reduced additional harm and loss of life," he wrote. "We are confident the investigation and third-party review of the events of that day will bring all of the facts to light."

The video also shows Crumbley walking out of the bathroom, setting his gun down and putting his hands up, apparently surrendering to sheriff's deputies, according to Johnson's latest court filing.

Johnson said he is asking an Oakland County judge to add the guard as a defendant to a civil suit already filed on behalf of several parents of students who died or witnessed the violence. According to court documents Johnson plans to file this week, the guard told investigators she did not see or hear anything in the bathroom, which is why she shut the door.

The surveillance video is under a protective order by the court, which restricts it from the public.

The lawsuit filed earlier this year claims Oxford employees acted negligently in failing to intervene and stop the alleged shooter, Ethan Crumbley, when he exhibited disturbing behavior.

Four students, Hana St. Juliana, Tate, Justin, and Madisyn Baldwin, died in the shooting. Six other students and one teacher were also injured. St. Juliana's and Baldwin's families are plaintiffs in a different civil suit in federal court against various district officials.

 
Ethan Crumbley, the teenager accused of gunning down four students and injuring several others at his Michigan high school, pleaded guilty to all charges against him on Monday.
"He's evil," Oakland County Sheriff Michael Bouchard told reporters after court Monday, adding that he's relieved the plea means "the victims don't have to go through the heartbreak of the testimony and the evidentiary presentation of all the stuff that happened that terrible, terrible day."
David Williams, chief assistant prosecutor in Oakland County, said Friday when the plea was announced that there were "no plea deals, no reductions and no agreements regarding sentencing."
The 24 charges against Crumbley included terrorism and murder.

"We are not aware of any other case anywhere in the country where a mass shooter has been convicted of terrorism on state charges," Oakland County Prosecutor Karen McDonald said at a news conference Monday.
The plea "guarantees every person who was in Oxford High School on that day will have a chance, if they want to, to speak in their own words about how this has affected them," she said.
Crumbley's attorney, Paulette Michel Loftin, said Monday that her client is remorseful and is "taking accountability for his actions." The teen is set to return to court on Feb. 9. Sentencing will follow; at the sentencing, victims will have the opportunity to read statements.
 
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